Wisdom in clinical reasoning and medical practice
Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, Vol 30, 3: 231-247.
Exploring informal components of clinical reasoning, we argue that they
need to be understood via the analysis of professional wisdom. Wise
decisions are needed where action or insight is vital, but neither
everyday nor expert knowledge provides solutions. Wisdom combines
experiential, intellectual, ethical, emotional and practical
capacities; we contend that it is also more strongly social than is
usually appreciated. But many accounts of reasoning specifically rule
out such features as irrational. Seeking to illuminate how wisdom
operates, we therefore build on Aristotle's work on informal reasoning.
His account of rhetorical communication shows how non-formal components
can play active parts in reasoning, retaining, or even enhancing its
reasonableness. We extend this account, applying it to forms of
healthcare-related reasoning which are characterised by the need for
wise decision-making. We then go on to explore some of what clinical
wise reasoning may mean, concluding with a case taken from
psychotherapeutic practice.
Edmondson, Ricca), Pearce, Jane, Woerner, Markus H.
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